Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0025202 (
melanoma
)
69,561
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Introduction of the
herpes simplex
type I thymidine kinase (HSV-TK) gene into tumor tissue, followed by ganciclovir, initiates a phosphorylation cascade that induces formation of a toxic ganciclovir triphosphate. Animal trials suggest that this ganciclovir triphosphate has antitumor activity. Here we report application of the HSV-TK transfection approach using a retroviral construct. Sixteen patients (median age 61.5 years) with refractory carcinoma (13
melanoma
, 1 breast cancer, 1 nonsmall-cell lung cancer, and 1 osteogenic sarcoma) received intratumoral injection of HSV-TK retroviral vector at escalating doses (0.2x10(7) cfu per injection x 5 daily doses) and we evaluated them for toxicity and activity. We observed grade III pain associated with cellulitis in one patient following injection. Analysis of blood samples drawn between 3 and 28 weeks from 14 patients for replication-competent retrovirus by PCR analysis of the amphotrophic envelope revealed no replication-competent retrovirus. We injected 21 lesions. We identified no tumor responses of the injected lesions. Of 13 patients with advanced
melanoma
, 6 survived over one year. Thus, injection of retroviral delivered HSV-TK in patients with refractory cancer was well-tolerated.
...
PMID:Toxicity assessment of intratumoral injection of the herpes simplex type I thymidine kinase gene delivered by retrovirus in patients with refractory cancer. 1148 88
Varicella-zoster virus (VZV) open reading frame 63 (ORF63), located between nucleotides 110581 and 111417 in the internal repeat region, encodes a nuclear phosphoprotein which is homologous to
herpes simplex
virus type 1 (HSV-1) ICP22 and is duplicated in the terminal repeat region as ORF70 (nucleotides 118480 to 119316). We evaluated the role of ORFs 63 and 70 in VZV replication, using recombinant VZV cosmids and PCR-based mutagenesis to make single and dual deletions of these ORFs. VZV was recovered within 8 to 10 days when cosmids with single deletions were transfected into
melanoma
cells along with the three intact VZV cosmids. In contrast, VZV was not detected in transfections carried out with a dual deletion cosmid. Infectious virus was recovered when ORF63 was cloned into a nonnative AvrII site in this cosmid, confirming that failure to generate virus was due to the dual ORF63/70 deletion and that replication required at least one gene copy. This requirement may be related to our observation that ORF63 interacts directly with ORF62, the major immediate-early transactivating protein of VZV. ORF64 is located within the inverted repeat region between nucleotides 111565 and 112107; it has some homology to the HSV-1 Us10 gene and is duplicated as ORF69 (nucleotides 117790 to 118332). ORF64 and ORF69 were deleted individually or simultaneously using the VZV cosmid system. Single deletions of ORF64 or ORF69 yielded viral plaques with the same kinetics and morphology as viruses generated with the parental cosmids. The dual deletion of ORF64 and ORF69 was associated with an abnormal plaque phenotype characterized by very large, multinucleated syncytia. Finally, all of the deletion mutants that yielded recombinants retained infectivity for human T cells in vitro and replicated efficiently in human skin in the SCIDhu mouse model of VZV pathogenesis.
...
PMID:Mutational analysis of the repeated open reading frames, ORFs 63 and 70 and ORFs 64 and 69, of varicella-zoster virus. 1148 68
One approach to gene therapy of cancer is based on the insertion of a suicide gene into tumor cells and subsequent activation of the suicide mechanism. We used the
herpes simplex
virus thymidine kinase (HSVtk) gene followed by ganciclovir (GCV) treatment. The goal of our experiments was to determine the effectiveness of HSVtk gene therapy in
malignant melanoma
. B16BL6 murine
melanoma
cells retrovirally transduced with the HSVtk gene became sensitive to low concentrations of GCV. Analysis by RT-PCR showed HSVtk expression in transduced B16BL6tk+ cells. Apoptotic cell death was found in B16BL6tk+ cells treated with GCV (20 microM). The sensitivity of B16BL6tk+ cells to GCV was also examined in vivo. Tumors inoculated subcutaneously into C57BL6 mice regressed rapidly when treated with GCV (50 mg/kg twice a day) and disappeared completely after 14 days treatment. The mice remained in remission for 5 months. A bystander effect through which nontransduced B16BL6 cells were also inhibited by GCV administration when cocultured with B16BL6tk+ cells was expected. However, only slight killing of nontransduced cells was observed in vitro. Analysis of the bystander effect in vivo showed complete regression of tumors inoculated with a mixture of cells mostly consisting of B16BL6tk+ cells. A distant bystander effect was also examined. There was no regression of wild-type tumors raised at a distant site from primary B16BL6tk+ tumors. The failure of a more effective bystander effect indicates the need for further investigation of the possible use of combined gene therapy to treat
melanoma
.
...
PMID:The efficacy of retroviral herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene transfer and ganciclovir treatment on the inhibition of melanoma growth in vitro and in vivo. 1182 Jul 24
There are at least two hurdles confronting the use of the adenovirus (Ad)-mediated
herpes simplex
virus thymidine kinase (HSVtk)/ganciclovir (GCV) system for the treatment of cancer. One is inefficient Ad vector-mediated gene transfer into tumor cells lacking the primary receptor, i.e., the coxsackievirus and adenovirus receptor (CAR). The other is hepatotoxicity due to unwanted vector spread into the liver, even when Ad vectors are injected intratumorally. Herein, we present an attractive strategy for overcoming such limitations based on use of a fiber-modified Ad vector containing an RGD peptide motif in the fiber knob. HSVtk-expressing Ad vectors containing mutant fiber (AdRGD-tk) or wild-type fiber (Ad-tk) were injected intratumorally into CAR-negative B16
melanoma
cells inoculated into mice, after which GCV was injected intraperitoneally for 10 days. AdRGD-tk showed approximately 25 times more antitumor activity than Ad-tk. Histopathological studies suggested that liver damage in mice injected with AdRGD-tk was significantly lower than that in mice injected with Ad-tk. Intratumoral administration of luciferase-expressing Ad vectors containing the mutant fiber (AdRGD-L2) resulted in nearly 40 times more luciferase production in the tumor, but 8 times less production in the liver than the conventional Ad vectors (Ad-L2). These results indicate that combination of fiber-modified vectors and a HSVtk/GCV system is a potentially useful and safe approach for the treatment of tumors lacking CAR expression, and that fiber-modified vectors could be of great utility for gene therapy and gene transfer experiments.
...
PMID:Enhanced antitumor effect and reduced vector dissemination with fiber-modified adenovirus vectors expressing herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase. 1189 39
Herpes simplex
virus type-1 (HSV-1) has been demonstrated as a potentially useful gene delivery vector for gene therapy due to its high efficiency of in vivo transduction. The helper virus-dependent, HSV- 1 amplicon vectors were developed for easier operation and their larger capacity. In this study, the
herpes simplex
virus type-1 thymidine kinase (HSVtk) gene was cloned into the pHE700 amplicon vector to make an HE7tk vector and used for in vivo gene delivery. Human
melanoma
xenografts were established in athymic nude mice. Tumors were injected directly with HE7tk vector alone, HE7tk vector followed by ganciclovir (GCV), or a pHE700 amplicon vector carrying a green fluorescent protein (HE7GFP) gene followed by GCV. Efficient HSVtk transgene expression was found in the tumor 3 days after injection. Animals transduced with HE7tk followed by GCV had minimal tumor growth (P < .01 ). Animals that received either HE7tk vector without GCV or HE7GFP vector with GCV had some reduction in tumor growth compared to animals that were injected with buffer only. These data indicate that replication-defective HSV-1 amplicon vectors can be used effectively to deliver transgenes into solid tumors in vivo.
...
PMID:Antitumor effects on human melanoma xenografts of an amplicon vector transducing the herpes thymidine kinase gene followed by ganciclovir. 1191 38
An important consequence of the suicide gene therapeutic paradigm is the phenomenon of bystander cell killing, the death of adjacent tumor cells not transduced with the thymidine kinase (TK) gene from
herpes simplex
virus (HSV) after treatment with the antiviral drug, ganciclovir (GCV). Evidence from quantitative in vitro assays of glioma cell lines suggest that both murine and human gliomas are similar in expressing high sensitivity to the bystander effect. In five of six glial tumors examined, the presence of only 5% of HSV-TK-expressing transduced cells in the culture resulted in >90% tumor cell death/stasis after addition of GCV. Several lines of evidence support gap junction intercellular communication (GJIC) as important in the bystander effect. In vitro metabolic assays, performed with GCV in the medium, indicated that more tumor burden was reduced when culture conditions supported cell-cell contact of parental and HSV-TK-transduced cells. Additionally, a double dye transfer assay showed that cell communication through the gap junction is greatest for glioma, less for
melanoma
, and much less for colorectal carcinoma cell lines. In vitro metabolic assays with mixtures of TK+/TK- homologous tumor cells confirmed that glioma cell lines were more susceptible to bystander killing than melanomas. Assays with chimeric tumor mixtures of TK+/TK - cells showed that the level of the bystander killing obtained was characteristic of the TK-bystander cells. The in vitro findings were confirmed in vivo with GCV-treated homologous and chimeric tumors composed of TK+/TK- cells. Day 21 mean tumor volumes (MTVs) indicated the growths obtained were characteristic of the bystander activity reflective of the nontransduced cell population. Furthermore, nontransduced, high-GJIC cells in a chimeric tumor mass appeared to effectively bridge between transduced tumor cells and poorly communicating nontransduced cells. Finally, the importance of a gap junction protein, such as connexin-43, in facilitating the bystander effect was demonstrated with the HT29 low-GJIC cell line. When the TK-nontransduced cell population expressed connexin-43, a better bystander kill was achieved compared to the parental counterpart.
...
PMID:Purified herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase retroviral particles: III. Characterization of bystander killing mechanisms in transfected tumor cells. 1191 47
Varicella-zoster virus (VZV) open reading frame 17 (ORF 17) is the gene corresponding to
Herpes simplex
-virus (HSV) UL41. The UL41 gene encodes the virion host shutoff factor (vhs), a RNase that has been the object of detailed studies. In contrast to HSV, knowledge about VZV mediated shutoff effects and the role of ORF 17 is poor. We investigated the ORF 17 expression in infected cells and analyzed shutoff effects. ORF 17 expression could not be proven in infected human fibroblast cell lines and
melanoma
(MeWo) cells. Only after induction by Phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate an ORF 17 expression became detectable in MeWo cells. Nevertheless, using stable expressed GAPDH mRNA as a marker for mRNA degradation, a VZV mediated shutoff, independent of ORF 17 expression, became measurable. Transfection experiments demonstrated that transient ORF 17 expression did not decrease the cellular GAPDH mRNA level. We examined whether the VZV shutoff factor is a tegument protein causing an early shutoff or whether it needs to be expressed (delayed shutoff). The GAPDH mRNA level in Actinomycin D pretreated and infected MeWo cells did not decrease even faster than the theoretical decay rate based on a half-life of 24 h. These findings lead to the conclusion that the VZV shutoff factor is not a mature protein localized in the virion and that VZV causes a delayed virion host shutoff effect.
...
PMID:Varicella-zoster virus (VZV) mediates a delayed host shutoff independent of open reading frame (ORF) 17 expression. 1192 88
Suicide gene therapy in combination with pro-drugs represents an attractive approach to the treatment of cancer. Unfortunately this approach is limited by difficulty in targeting all tumor cells, especially those at the distant metastases associated with the most complex tumors. For this reason, attempts to stimulate global anti-tumor immune responses at the sites of effective suicide gene/pro-drug-mediated tumor cell destruction are appealing. Here we show that, by including a gene coding for secreted secondary lymphoid tissue chemokine (SLC) along with the
herpes simplex
virus thymide kinase (HSV-TK) gene in a bicistronic vector for anti-tumor gene therapy in conjunction with the pro-drug ganciclovir (GCV), we are able to mediate a greatly enhanced anti-tumor effect in the murine B16
melanoma
tumor model. The data presented suggests that this enhanced antitumor effect is the result of a strong induced CTL immune response resulting from the recruitment of immune cells to the site of HSV-TK/GCV-induced tumor destruction by the potent chemokine SLC.
...
PMID:Combined HSV-TK/GCV and secondary lymphoid tissue chemokine gene therapy inhibits tumor growth and elicits potent antitumor CTL response in tumor-bearing mice. 1201 27
Expression of viral fusogenic membrane glycoproteins (FMGs) is a potent strategy for antitumor cytotoxic gene therapy in which tumor cells are fused into large multinucleated syncytia. To understand how local cell killing can potentiate activation of antitumor immune responses, we characterized the mechanism of FMG-mediated cell killing. Here, we show that syncytia are highly ordered structures over 24-48 h but then die through processes that, by multiple morphological and biochemical criteria, bear very little resemblance to classical apoptosis. Death of syncytia is associated with nuclear fusion and premature chromosome condensation as well as severe ATP depletion and autophagic degeneration, accompanied by release of vesicles reminiscent of exosomes (syncytiosomes). Dying syncytia produce significantly more syncytiosomes than normal cells or cells killed by irradiation, freeze thaw, or osmotic shock. These syncytiosomes also load dendritic cells (DCs) more effectively than exosomes from cells dying by other mechanisms. Finally, we demonstrate that syncytiosomes from either autologous or allogeneic fusing
melanoma
cells lead to cross-presentation of a defined tumor antigen, gp100, by DCs to a gp100-specific CTL clone. Cross-presentation was significantly more efficient than that with exosomes from normal, irradiated, or
herpes simplex
virus thymidine kinase/ganciclovir-killed tumor cells. Therefore, FMG-mediated cell killing combines very effective local tumor cell killing with the potential to be a highly immunogenic method of cytotoxic gene therapy. In addition, these data open the way for novel methods of loading DCs with relevant tumor-associated antigens for vaccine development.
...
PMID:Viral fusogenic membrane glycoproteins kill solid tumor cells by nonapoptotic mechanisms that promote cross presentation of tumor antigens by dendritic cells. 1243 52
Oncolytic
herpes simplex
virus type 1 (HSV-1) vectors are emerging as an effective and powerful therapeutic approach for cancer. Replication-competent HSV-1 vectors with mutations in genes that affect viral replication, neuropathogenicity, and immune evasiveness have been developed and tested for their safety and efficacy in a variety of mouse models. Evidence to-date following administration into the brain attests to their safety, an important observation in light of the neuropathogenicity of the virus. Phase I clinical traits of three vectors, G207, 1716, and NV1020, are either ongoing or completed, with no adverse events attributed to the virus. These and other HSV-1 vectors are effective against a myriad of solid tumors in mice, including glioma,
melanoma
, breast, prostate, colon, ovarian, and pancreatic cancer. Enhancement of activity was observed when HSV-1 vectors were used in combination with traditional therapies such as radiotherapy and chemotherapy, providing an attractive strategy to pursue in the clinic. Oncolytic HSV-1 vectors expressing "suicide" genes (thymidine kinase, cytosine deaminase, rat cytochrome P450) or immunostimulatory genes (IL-12, GM-CSF, etc.) have been constructed to maximize tumor destruction through multimodal therapeutic mechanisms. Further advances in virus delivery and tumor specificity should improve the likelihood for successful translation to the clinic.
...
PMID:Oncolytic herpes simplex virus vectors for cancer virotherapy. 1252 36
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>